ULUGH BEG

Ulugh Beg, which means “great prince,” was a title that replaced his original name, Muhammad Taragay. He was raised at the court of his grandfather, Tamerlane, and from 1409 was the ruler of Maverannakhr, the chief city of which was Samarkand.

In contrast with his grandfather, Ulugh Beg was not interested in conquest but gained fame as a scientist. At Samarkand in 1420 he founded a madrasa, or institution of higher learning, in which astronomy was the most important subject. Ulugh Beg himself selected the scientists who taught there, first interviewing them to determine their qualifications. His madrasa differed from others of
that time both in the content and in the level of the subjects taught there. Besides Ulugh Beg, the lecturers included Salāh al-Dīn Mūsā ibn Mahmūd (Qādī Zāda), and Ghiyāth al-Dīn Jamshīd al-Kāshī.

Four years after founding the madrasa, Ulugh Beg erected a three-story observatory. At the instigation of the jurists, however, the building was reduced to ruins by the beginning of the sixteenth century, and in time apparently disappeared. Its precise location remained unknown until 1908, when the archaeologist V. L. Vyatkin found its remains.

The main instrument of the observatory proved to be–not a quadrant, as Vyatkin thought–but a “Fakhrī sextant.” A trench about two meters wide was dug in a hill, along the line of the meridian, and in it was placed a segment of the arc of the instrument. The part that is preserved, which was in the trench, consists of two parallel walls faced with marble, fifty-one centimeters apart.

The main use of the Fakhrī sextant was in determining the basic constants of astronomy: the inclination of the ecliptic to the equator, the point of the vernal equinox, the length of the tropical year, and other constants arising from observation of the sun. Thus it was built chiefly for solar observations in general and for observations of the moon and the planets in particular (an arc of 60° is sufficient). Other instruments used were an armillary sphere, a triquetrum, an astrolable, and a shāmila(an instrument serving as astrolabe and quadrant).

With the aid of the Fakhrī sextant one could determine at noon every day the meridional height of the sun, its distance from the zenith, and its declination; and from this information one could deduce the latitude and the inclination of the ecliptic, such that between the latitudeφ the distance from the zenith z, and the declinationδ there is the known relationship φ=z + δ. For example, lettingέ be the inclination of the ecliptic, the distance from the zenith at noon on the day of the summer solstice is z1=Φ–έ and on the day of the winter solstice z2=φ+έ,equations that lead toέ = x 1/2 (z2 –z1). The value obtained by Ulugh Beg for the inclination of the ecliptic, ε = 23° 30’ 17”, differs by only 32” from the true value (for his time).1 According to him, the latitude of Samarkand was 39°37’33”.2

The radius of the Fakhrī sextant in Ulugh Beg’s observatory was 40.04 meters, which made it the largest astronomical instrument in the world of that type. On the are of the sextant are divisions in which 70.2 centimeters corresponds to one degree; 11.7 millimeters (or, if rounded, 12 millimeters) represents one minute; 1 millimeter is five seconds: and 0.4 millimeter is two seconds. It has been experimentally established that with unrestricted time for observation and sufficient training of the observer, the value of the threshold of angular discrimination can be considered as two to five seconds. Thus the choice of the scale of the main instrument, and its smallest divisions, was made with consideration for the limits of angular discrimination.

An important result of the scientific work of Ulugh Beg and his school was the astronomical tables called the Zīj of Ulugh Beg or the Zīj–i Gurgāni (Guragon, the title of Genghis Khan’s son-in-law, was also used by Ulugh Beg). This work, originally written in the Tadzhilk language, consists of a theoretical section and the results of the observations made at the Samarkand observatory; the latter include actual tables of calendar calculations, of trigonometry, and of the planets, as well as a star catalog.

The basis of Ulugh Beg’s trigonometric tables was the determination of sin 1° with great accuracy. One of the methods of solving this problem was Ulugh Beg’s, and another was that of Al-;Kāshī3. Both lead to the solution of the third-degree algebraic equation with the form.

x 3 + ax + b = 0,

where x = sin 1° . Solving this equation by an original method of subsequent approximations, one obtains

x = sin 1° = 0.017452406437283571.

In his trigonometric tables Ulugh Beg gives the values of sines and tangents for every minute to 45°, and for every five minutes from 45° to 90° the values of cotangents are given for every degree. Comparing the values of the sines of any angles–for example, 20°, 23° and 26°–with the corresponding true values, we obtain the following:

According to Ulugh Beg

True Value

20° 0.342020142

20° 0.342020143

23° 0.390731129

20° 0.390731128

26° 0.438371147

26° 0.438371147

Also strikingly accurate is the study of the yearly movements of the five bright plants known in the time of Ulugh Beg, as is evident bleow:4

According to Ulugh

Beg True Value

Saturn 12°13’39”

12°13’36” (d’ Alembert)

Jupiter 30° 20’ 34”

30°20’31” (d’ Alembert)

Mars 191°17’15”

191°17’10” (Lalande)

Venus 224°17’32”

224°17’30” (Lalande)

Mercury 53°43’13”

53°43’3” (Lalande)

Thus the difference between Ulugh Beg’s data and that of modern times relating to the first four planets falls within the limits of two to five seconds.

In the case of Mercury the difference is somewhat larger–ten seconds at most–because, of the planets mentioned, Mercury has the greatest orbital velocity. In addition, the eccentricity of its orbit is 0.206–that is, it is considerable in comparison with the eccentricity of the four other planets–while the greatest visible angular distance of Mercury from the sun’s disk is only about 28°. These peculiarities of the planet make observation of it with the naked eye fairly difficult, and consequently have an adverse effect on the accuracy of the results of observation. The yearly precession was determined by Ulugh Beg5 to be 51.4”, while the true value is 50.2.”.

The situation is somewhat different with Ulugh Beg’s values for the positions of the stars. After that of Hipparchus, the star catalog of Ulugh Beg was the second in seventeen centuries. It contains 1,018 stars, the positions of some of which were determined mainly from observations made at the Samarkand observatory, and others from observations made before the beginning of 1437 (A.H./841).6 The latter were taken from the star catalog of al-Sūfī, who apparently borrowed them from Ptolemy. Thus the star catalog of Ulugh Beg has great value, since it is basically original, but nevertheless was influenced by Ptolemy, at least in respect to its coordinates.

In 1941 an expedition under the leadership of T. N. Kari-Niazov discovered the tomb of Ulugh Beg in the mausoleum of Tamerlane in Samarkand. In contrast with the Islamic customs of burying the dead only in a shroud, Ulugh Beg lay fully clothed in a sarcophagus, in agreement with the prescription of the shariat; a man who died as a shakhid (martyr) had to be buried in his clothes. On the skeleton, traces of his violent death are clear: the third cervical vertebra was severed by a sharp instrument in such a way that the main portion of the body and an arc of that vertebra were cut off cleanly; the blow, struck from the left, also cut through the right corner of the lower jaw and its lower edge.

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Ulugh-Beg

The Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th ed.

Copyright The Columbia University Press

Ulugh-Beg or Ulug-Beg (both: ōō´lōōg bĕg), 1394–1449, Timurid ruler and astronomer. The grandson of Timur (or Tamerlane), he succeeded to the Timurid domain in 1447. A patron of the arts and sciences, he established an astronomical observatory at Samarkand and compiled a star catalog (1420–37). His work, written in Arabic, was translated into Persian. It became known in Europe in the 16th cent. and a Latin version appeared in England (1665). A small museum of astronomy now stands on the remains of his observatory.

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Ulugh Beg

Science and Its Times: Understanding the Social Significance of Scientific Discovery
COPYRIGHT 2001 The Gale Group Inc.

Ulugh Beg

1394-1449

Central Asian ruler, astronomer, and mathematician who, in addition to gathering a number of leading scientific minds around him, made important contributions to trigonometry. A grandson of the Mongol conqueror Tamerlane, Ulugh Beg ruled the city of Samarqand, where he established a school that included Qadi Zada, al-Kashi, and others. His achievements included producing tables for sines and tangents that were correct to eight decimal places and helping to create the Zij-i sultani, a star catalogue regarded as a standard work until the seventeenth century. Little interested in ruling, Ulugh Beg was later usurped by his son, who had him put to death.

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Ulugh Beg

Science and Its Times: Understanding the Social Significance of Scientific Discovery
COPYRIGHT 2001 The Gale Group Inc.

Ulugh Beg

1394-1449

Tartar Astronomer and Mathematician

Ulugh Beg made Samarkand one of the leading cultural and intellectual centers of the world. In that city he established a madrasa (Islamic institution of higher learning) that emphasized astronomical studies. He also constructed an observatory that became the leading center for astronomical research in the fifteenth century. Working with his assistants, he produced the important Zij-i Djadid Sultani astronomical tables and star catalog.

The grandson of the Tartar conqueror Tamerlane, Ulugh Beg was born in Sultaniyya (in modern Iran), on March 22, 1394. His birth name, Muhammad Taragay, was immediately superseded by the cognomen Ulugh Beg, meaning "Great Prince." In 1409 Ulugh Beg's father, Shah Rukh, appointed him governor of Maverannakr (present-day southeastern Uzbekistan), the chief city of which was Samarkand. Though actively
engaged in the economic, political, and military affairs of his territory, Ulugh Beg was more interested in scientific pursuits.

Among his many construction projects was a magnificent two-story madrasa in Samarkand. Another was built in Bukhara. Completed around 1420, these institutions still stand and fulfill their original function. Ulugh Beg interviewed and selected the scientists who were to teach at these schools. Over 90 scholars were on the faculty at Samarkand, where it is said Ulugh Beg himself lectured. He also determined the curriculum, whose most important subject was astronomy. To support research in this area, he decided to build an observatory.

Construction on the observatory began in 1424. Its design closely followed that of the Maragha observatory (built in 1259) in Tabriz. Built on a circular foundation more than 262.5 ft (80 m) in diameter, the Samarkand observatory's three-stories rose to a height of 108 ft (33 m). A trench 8 ft (2.5 m) wide and 36 ft (11 m) deep at its lowest point was excavated to accommodate the huge meridian arc that was to be the observatory's main instrument. When completed, the arc extended from the trench's deepest point to just below the observatory roof. Its radius was 131 ft (40 m), making it the largest astronomical instrument of the fifteenth century.

The 262.5-ft (40-m) meridian arc has been called a quadrant by some scholars, but it was most likely a Fakhri sextant. Designed primarily for solar observations, it was used for various lunar and planetary measurements as well. The observatory contained other instruments, including an armillary sphere, triquetrum, astrolabe, quadrant, and a large parallectic ruler. Observations made at Samarkand were used to establish the inclination of the ecliptic, the point of the vernal equinox, the precession of the equinoxes, and other basic astronomical constants. The Muslim astronomer Ali-Kudsi was the observatory's director.

Ulugh Beg's most important work was the Zij-i Djadid Sultani. It contains a theoretical section and the results of observations he and his assistants made. Calendric, planetary, and trigonometric tables are included as well as a new star catalog containing 1,018 stars. The positions of many of these stars were determined from observations made at Samarkand, while others were taken from the catalog of al-Sufi, who had apparently taken them from Ptolemy (second century a.d.). Ulugh Beg's catalog was only the second original star catalog since Hipparchus (170?-120? b.c.). The completion date for the Zij-i Djadid Sultani is traditionally given as 1437, but Ulugh Beg continued working on it until 1449.

After a brief reign as the ruler of Turkestan (1447-49), Ulugh Beg was assassinated on October 27, 1449, by order of his son, Abdul al-Latif. Ulugh Beg was buried as a martyr in the Gur Emir mausoleum of Tamerlane. Unfortunately, the Samarkand observatory fell to ruins by the end of the fifteenth century and was forgotten. It was only rediscovered in 1908 by V.L. Vyatkin.

STEPHEN D. NORTON

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